There are a ton of these type of Arduino devices on the market[0], although this one seems pretty featureful.
I think for something like this to be successful, it needs to be low cost, open-source, and have strong libraries and documentation for beginners. Products like this also tend to have a small, tight-knit community of enthusiasts. Holding a contest with prizes is often a good way to pull in users.
I'm glad someone mentioned the Esplora, which I have used a couple times now as a control unit for a robot but would work fine with an LCD as a portable game unit.
Really, why you would build a game device off an Arduino instead of a Raspberry PI makes no sense to me. A PI is going to run circles around an Arduino at the same cost. I gave my kid a Raspberry PI with an SD Card with Scratch on it. It's a cool way to show how to make games.
I wonder what the once quite vibrant dingoo scene is up to these days. Based on quick google it seems that the cheap fun hardware is discontinued and no more available.
Dingoo was after Wiz, which was after GP2X, which was after the GP32 .. But it seems there are two splits now, one the 'high end' and one the middle ground .. can't wait for Pyra!
It's a bit confusing. At least, the DragonBox shop (In Germany, but official supplier for the UK) is pretty confusing, especially on mobile.
The PandoraGHz with screen seems to be out of stock, while the screen-less Pandoras and the less powerful Pandora Classic and PandoraRebirth are still available. They seem a bit expensive, but maybe that's just me.
Seems like an mBed would be way more suited to this than Arduino. They're cheaper, more powerful and the code is better written. There's no requirement for 5V here (which is the only real reason to use an Arduino these days).
I agree with your sentiment. It's a shame for such an interesting product. I actually haven't bought one yet for your exact reason. I only decided to share because I couldn't find a single post about Gamebuino on HN.
I understand that they might want emails, but why not get them from PayPal?
It doesn't help that the site and its webforms are also entirely unencrypted. I really want to let them know that this is what's stopping me from purchasing. I might email them.
I think for something like this to be successful, it needs to be low cost, open-source, and have strong libraries and documentation for beginners. Products like this also tend to have a small, tight-knit community of enthusiasts. Holding a contest with prizes is often a good way to pull in users.
Seems like a very cool project!
[0]:
http://arduino.cc/en/Main/ArduinoBoardEsplora
http://shop.evilmadscientist.com/productsmenu/tinykitlist/10...
http://www.arduboy.com/
http://belogic.com/uzebox/index.asp